Neil said that Murdoch's "people" had lobbied the Labour Party to include measures ending the ban on foreign ownership of UK TV licences in the 2003 Communications Act.

This would, much later down the line, allow Murdoch's News Corporation to attempt to acquire the remaining 60.9% shares in Sky that it did not already own.

"This was something Mr Murdoch's people lobbied hard for, with his support, and they had unique and extensive access to the levers of power at the heart of the Blair government to make this lobbying effective," wrote Neil in his statement.

"When Mr Murdoch testified before this Inquiry that he had never asked government for anything it gave me cause to wonder if he had forgotten this - or forgotten he was testifying under oath."

Both Murdoch and former Labour prime minister Tony Blair denied while appearing at Leveson that an agreement had been reached ahead of the 1997 general election, involving support from Murdoch's papers for Labour in exchange for the party not undermining his UK media interests.

But Neil, who was also previously the founding chairman of Sky, suggested that Murdoch and Blair had indeed reached an understanding ahead of the 1997 landslide victory for Labour.

"'How we treat Rupert Murdoch's media interest when in power', Mr Blair told me in 1996, a year before he became prime minister, 'will depend on how his newspapers treat the Labour Party in the run up to the election'. That is exactly how it panned out," said Neil.

"The Sun and the News of the World fell in line behind New Labour in the run up to the 1997 election, The Times stayed broadly neutral and The Sunday Times unenthusiastically Tory.

"After the election, The Times quickly fell in line as the New Labour house journal... in return New Labour in power did nothing to undermine or threaten Mr Murdoch's British media interests."

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